Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Collaborative Creation in L5R

THE MANY MAKE ONE

I've posted before on the family creation process for our Legend of the Five Rings campaign. A couple of weeks ago we finally got to sit down and try that out. We began by picking the kind of daimyo trhey wanted. After some discussion, the group narrowed things down to
a Scholarly or Spiritual Daimyo. A couple of other had been on the table, but
generally the players shied away from the disadvantages associated with those
choices. That’s an interesting consideration. If it was shorter
term game, with the sense that we’d get to play again, the group might have
been less cautious. But given we’ll likely have just one shot
with the campaign, they erred towards caution. Since many of the decisions would come down to two or three hard choices, I decided I would rotate the “tie
breaker.” One person would make the call for an item, and then that role would
pass to their left for the next one. The final decision was to go with a Scholarly lord (much to the chagrin of the player who planned to be the general).

Selecting family virtues came next and they took a slightly
different approach. They picked their least valued, Makoto “Sincerity,”
first. That choice they justified given that their neighbors would not
trust them as upstarts. They chose Yu (Courage) and Jin (Compassion) as their
important virtues, but Chugo (Duty) as their highest value. That’s interesting
in that being the central virtue normally of the Scorpion. I have to consider
how the NPCs will express that. These choices were less difficult than I
feared. Given the number they could pick, everyone got something they liked.

HOLDINGS

Next I had them each select two holdings for their province-
with each player getting a pick on two separate rounds. They began with
Mountains as a pre-set feature, since that fit with the background. They chose:

River Access

Mines

Monastery

Rice Farm

Rich Forest

Quarry

City

Difficult Terrain

Master

Shrine

They tended to focus on details which couldn’t be added
later. I’ll have to take that into account if I rewrite the mechanics. There’s
a definite incentive to take those. Most players did a practical and a personal
pick. I felt generous, so I gave them the Rice Farms at rank 2. Given that I
pictured at least a portion of the lands having been the Lion’s fields, that
made sense. I also gave the lead player for the round one extra pick and he
selected a Dojo.

For the meibutsu, the strange little thing for their
province, they selected having the hottest wasabi in all of Rokugan.

ASPECTS

For family aspects, they had to take NONE OF US IS AS GREAT AS ALL OF
US. That’s a default in Wick’s Blood
& Honor and I kept it. There was some debate about the other three
picks. Eventually I had them each nominate a couple and we went with those with
overlap.

EVEN A THIEF MUST LEARN HIS TRADE

THE MOUNTAIN NEVER FALLS

THE BEST SWORD STAYS IN THE SCABBARD

Those interesting choices really change the complexion of
the NPCs, general retainers and samurai within the province. I didn’t force the
players to choose one of these for their characters- and as you’ll see they
went in very different directions. Instead I have to consider these a general
feeling and perhaps the tone set by their Daimyo. On the plus side, they have
skilled craftsmen, can resist torture, and a good at intimidation through
force. On the negative side, they’re overly gracious to the peasantry, they’re
more brutish and uncultured, and they only use violence as a last resort. That’s
a tough set of directives for a family effectively occupying a land long under
the dominion of another Clan.

The group chose the name Shimasu, drawing from a phrase
dictionary, meaning Breathing, as in the breath of the Dragon. I’ll come back
to their choices for duties in a moment, since that reflects their character
creation choices.

TRUTHS

Each player had the opportunity to declare a truth about the
province:

There’s a rare and beautiful hot springs waterfall which
runs down one of the mountains.

The people are well-known for their loyalty to their diamyo.

At certain times the skies above the mountains are lit up
with an unearthly fire.

The finest iron for steel-making comes from the mines of the
province.

The rich forest is rumored to harbor a race of intelligent
monkeymen.

A couple of notes on those. At the beginning of the second
session, Alan, the player who introduced #5 asked if he might perhaps rescind
that. That maybe his Monkeymen might be a significant problem…I said no. The
rumored Monkeymen would remain. I also liked the second choice there- that the
people of the province are well-known for their loyalty to their daimyo. Given
that the new clan and family have only just taken over these lands, that
loyalty will actually be to their former daimyo. They’re effectively occupiers
trying to win hearts and minds. If they can do so, they will have a stalwart
populace. But actually getting to that will have major hurdles.

One mistake I made was trying to put together both the
family creation and character creation processes into one session. I would have
been better off doing the former and then setting up and discussing elements of
the latter. However since we’d had some delays and I knew the holidays would
bump us, I wanted to get both done. As it was, the CC process felt a little
overwhelming since it presented a completely different set of choices and
concepts. I’d given the players the rules ahead of time, but knew that they
would not have actually read them- or at least I needed to assume they hadn’t. We
got a ways into character building before I decided we should call it and
finish it up the second session. That ended up being a good idea as we spent a
great deal of time finishing choices for flaws and coming up with aspects. That
process really needs time to breathe.

THE PLAYER CHARACTERS

The players each chose roles for their characters, and then
picked two important positions which would be filled by NPCs. These were
defensive choices to keep me from hosing them in these areas. They selected a Commissioner
of Mines and Other Resources (Mirumoto Akakado) and a Master of Taxes (Kitsuki
O-Mugi).

Kuni Setsu

Widowed wife of an Agasha; she accepted a role in
the new family in hopes of finding peace

School: Soshi Shugenja Role:
Oniwaban (Spy Master)

Flaws: Lost Love (Aspect), Rival, and Dependent

Aspects:

Gracious Widow of a Great Hero

Finally Something to Strive For

Least Noteworthy Student of the Soshi School

Trouble: All the Tools, No Experience

Kuni Kosunami

Widowed wife of a Kitsuki Investigator; she accepted a role
in the new family along with her cousin (Setsu)